UFC and Spike TV Reveal "The Ultimate Fighter 14" Cast Featuring 32 Fighters

The Ultimate Fighter 14 now has a cast as Spike TV announced earlier today who will be competing for the six-figure UFC contract.Featherweight and bantamweight’s will highlight the show with 32 fighters competing to see who is the next “Ultimate Fighte…

The Ultimate Fighter 14 now has a cast as Spike TV announced earlier today who will be competing for the six-figure UFC contract.

Featherweight and bantamweight’s will highlight the show with 32 fighters competing to see who is the next “Ultimate Fighter.”

This also marks the final season in which the show will air on Spike TV as the UFC recently announced that next season will move to FX.

An elimination round will cut the cast from 32 to 16—eight featherweights and eight bantamweights.

The show debuts on September 21 and features outspoken middleweight Michael “The Count” Bisping coaching opposite Jason “Mayhem” Miller.

Fighters to be on the lookout for are TJ Dillashaw, John Dodson, Bryan Caraway, Micah Miller, Eric Marriott and Stephen Bass.

 

BANTAMWEIGHTS:

 JOHN ALBERT

Fighting out of: Puyallup, Wash. / Victory Athletics

Record: 6-1-0

Age: 24

 

JOHNNY BEDFORD

Fighting out of: Watuga, Texas/ F3 Alliance

Record: 17-9-1

Age: 28

 

CARSON BEEBE

Fighting out of: Western Springs, Ill. / Gilbert Grappling

Record: 6-1-0

Age: 22

 

ROLAND DELORME

Fighting out of: Winnipeg, Manitoba / Winnipeg Academy of MMA

Record: 6-1-0

Age: 27

 

TJ DILLASHAW

Fighting out of: Sacramento, Calif. / Team Alpha Male

Record: 4-0-0

Age: 25

 

JOHN DODSON

Fighting out of: Albuquerque, N.M. / Jackson’s Mixed Martial Arts

Record: 11-5-0

Age: 26

 

CASEY DYER

Fighting out of: New Castle, Ind. / No Affiliation

Record: 6-1-0

Age: 21

 

BJ FERGUSON

Fighting out of: Louisville, Ky. / All-American MMA

Record: 6-2-0

Age: 29

 

JOSH FERGUSON

Fighting out of: Louisville, Ky. / All-American MMA

Record: 7-3-0

Age: 22

 

LOUIS GAUDINOT

Fighting out of: Yonkers, N.Y. / Team Tiger Schulmann

Record: 5-1-0

Age: 26

 

MATT JAGGERS

Fighting out of:  Connersville, Ind. / Team Wolfpack

Record: 20-7-0

Age: 25

 

TATEKI MATSUDA

Fighting out of: Boston, Mass. / Team Sityodtong

Record: 6-2-0

Age: 25

 

PAUL MCVEIGH

Fighting out of: Glasgow, Scotland / Dinky Ninjas

Record: 18-6-0

Age: 29

 

BRANDON MERKT

Fighting out of: New Richmond, Wisc. / The Academy

Record: 11-0-0

Age: 27

 

DUSTIN PAGUE

Fighting out of: Centreville, Va. / MASE MMA

Record: 9-4-0

Age: 23

 

ORVILLE SMITH

Fighting out of: Indianapolis, Ind. / Integrated Fighting

Record: 11-3-0

Age: 30

 

FEATHERWEIGHTS:

STEPHEN BASS

Fighting out of: Savannah, Ga. / Lloyd Irvin MMA

Record: 10-0-0

Age: 28

 

DENNIS BERMUDEZ

Fighting out of: Massapequa, N.Y./ Long Island MMA

Record: 7-2-0

Age: 24

 

DIEGO BRANDAO

Fighting out of: Albuquerque, N.M. / Jackson’s Mixed Martial Arts

Record: 13-7-0

Age: 23

 

MARCUS BRIMAGE

Fighting out of: Coconut Creek, Fla. / American Top Team

Record: 3-1-0

Age: 31

 

BRYAN CARAWAY

Fighting out of: Sacramento, Calif. / Team Alpha Male

Record: 15-5-0

Age: 26

 

JOSH CLOPTON

Fighting out of: San Francisco, Calif. / Skrap Pack

Record: 4-0-1

Age: 29

 

AKIRA CORASSANI

Fighting out of: Gothenburg, Sweden / Team Kaobon

Record: 9-3-0

Age: 28

 

KARSTEN LENJOINT

Fighting out of: Nottingham, United Kingdom / Wolfslair Academy     

Record: 7-1-0

Age: 30

 

ERIC MARRIOTT

Fighting out of: Independence, Mo. / Grindhouse MMA

Record: 20-5-0

Age: 25

 

MICAH MILLER

Fighting out of: Coconut Creek, Fla. / American Top Team

Record: 17-4-0

Age: 24

 

DUSTIN NEACE

Fighting out of: Granite City, Ill. / Hit Squad

Record: 22-17-1

Age: 24

 

JESSE NEWELL

Fighting out of: Ventura, Calif. / Knuckleheadz Boxing

Record: 6-1-0

Age: 24

 

BRIAN PEARMAN

Fighting out of: Springfield, Mo. / Springfield Fight Club

Record: 7-1-0

Age: 26

 

JIMMIE RIVERA

Fighting out of: Elmwood Park, N.J. / Team Tiger Schulmann

Record: 8-1-0

Age:  21

 

STEVEN SILER

Fighting out of: Ogden, Utah / Riven Academy

Record: 18-9-0

Age: 24

 

BRYSON WAILEHUA-HANSEN

Fighting out of: Honolulu, Hawaii / MMA Development

Record: 5-1-0

Age: 24

 

For additional information, follow Joshua Carey on    Twitter

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Dominick Cruz vs. Demetrious Johnson and 5 Matchups You Don’t Want to Miss

The second half of the year features high profile title defenses from all seven UFC champions.Anderson “The Spider” Silva gets the ball rolling next weekend at UFC 134 when he defends his title against the last man to defeat him in Yushin “Thunder” Oka…

The second half of the year features high profile title defenses from all seven UFC champions.

Anderson “The Spider” Silva gets the ball rolling next weekend at UFC 134 when he defends his title against the last man to defeat him in Yushin “Thunder” Okami.

Jon Jones, Jose Aldo, Frankie Edgar, Dominick Cruz, Georges St. Pierre, and Cain Velasquez will all follow suit.

While all the championship fights are terrific for fans, there are a several matchups that will be spectacular both in and out of the UFC.

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UFC’s Tito Ortiz: Potential Matchups for "The Huntington Beach Bad Boy"

At UFC 132, Tito Ortiz (16-9-1) proved to the world that he has plenty of fight left in him when he dismantled Ryan Bader.After dropping Bader with a crushing right hand, Ortiz quickly secured a fight-ending guillotine submission.Ortiz’ first-round sub…

At UFC 132, Tito Ortiz (16-9-1) proved to the world that he has plenty of fight left in him when he dismantled Ryan Bader.

After dropping Bader with a crushing right hand, Ortiz quickly secured a fight-ending guillotine submission.

Ortiz’ first-round submission victory helped him in returning to the win column, and he did so in impressive fashion.

When multiple injuries to main event fighters at UFC 133 left a void, Ortiz accepted UFC President Dana White‘s offer to headline the event opposite Rashad Evans.

Ortiz took the fight on short notice and appeared well-prepared for the matchup.

However, 35 days between fights proved to be too much when facing a No. 1 contender in Evans.

With Ortiz’ record now standing at 1-1 in 2011, speculation has been made as to who the former light heavyweight champion should face in his next trip to the Octagon.

Provided are a few potential matchups for “The Huntington Beach Bad Boy”.

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Jason Parillo on Training UFC 132’s Tito Ortiz, BJ Penn, and Career in MMA

LAS VEGAS – Jason Parillo has spent the majority of his life competing, studying, and coaching world champions in boxing. Parillo’s tremendous work ethic and love for “the sweet science” makes him one of the preeminent coaches in the …

LAS VEGAS – Jason Parillo has spent the majority of his life competing, studying, and coaching world champions in boxing.

Parillo’s tremendous work ethic and love for “the sweet science” makes him one of the preeminent coaches in the sport.

Nearly 20-years ago, Parillo gradually started making the transition over from boxing and a group of lifelong friends helped along the way.

“Back in 92’, I helped open L.A. Boxing which is like a franchise now,” Parillo recently told Bleacher Report. “I helped open it up when it was just a little boxing gym, but we taught a lot of personal classes and at that time I was an amateur boxer, I was trying to see if I could be an Olympian or something. Justin and Sean McCully, those guys were all into no holds barred back in the day, it wasn’t even MMA yet.

“I was friends with a lot of guys that came down there; I knew Rob McCullough, Tiki (Ghosn) when they were kids, and Tito (Ortiz) when he was younger. I used to work and spar with a lot of those guys just for the boxing, but over the course of time I worked with Muay-Thai guys, boxers, and MMA guys, because I’ve studied martial arts, I’ve been around a lot of different things and I’ve always had a good understanding of the distance of the fight.”

While two severe injuries derailed Parillo’s dreams of competing in the Olympics, the California based coach has used his vast knowledge to assist former two division UFC champion BJ Penn.

“I got out of boxing because I severed the ulnar nerve in my elbow and I had a detached retna,” Parillo who was 8-0 with 6 knockouts as a professional boxer said. “I got laser surgery on it, but I still have double vision on that from the detachment of my retina. I became a full-time coach and Pat (Tenore) the owner of RVCA said ‘I know you help all the guys with their boxing, why don’t you go help BJ (Penn)?’ This was before the Jens Pulver II fight and when I first started training BJ, I was training him with one-hand because I didn’t have my other arm, my ulnar nerve was still severed and only half of my hand has full use of it. I went out there, trained BJ and connected with him right away. He realized that I had something to offer him and I spent a good four-and-a-half years out there (Hawaii).

“BJ became my main guy all together, I was barely working with anybody else because he was so active and I was spending so much time in Hawaii and living there. Just from BJ, I branched out I started training different guys and it exposed to me different guys that knew I had something to offer them in the MMA game. I was just open minded enough to cross over into the MMA game and respect it.”

Respect is exactly what Parillo has given to the sport and he continues to evolve as the sport grows.

Striking in boxing and mixed martial arts is much different from the other. Parillo understands that and his fighters are reaping the benefits of his knowledge.

 “The distance in an MMA fight is completely different,” Parillo said. “In boxing you’re up in the pocket full-time, because you’re not worried about the takedowns, getting kneed, kicked, you step up in the pocket and that’s where you spend the majority of your fight. As where in MMA the distance is different, a fighter is going to be a little more squared off and boxers are more worried about their angles and their positioning. But a lot of those traditional boxing positions are putting you in vulnerable spots to where you can get taken down or where you can get kicked.

“In fairness, I like to think of myself as an old school boxing guy even though I’m only 37 years old. BJ pretty much glued me into the MMA game, I always tip-toed around it and always helped guys from way back into the day. I used to think that I was going to be a world champion boxer myself, so I wasn’t really focused on being full-time as a coach, but through the injuries and BJ bringing me to Hawaii it rooted me into the MMA game. It gave me a foundation to grow along with the sport and try to help improve these guys the best I can.”

While Penn awaits word on his next opponent, Parillo, who coaches at RVCA Sport Center in Orange County, Calif., has been working with former UFC light-heavweight champion, Tito Ortiz who fights Ryan Bader at UFC 132 in Las Vegas.

Ortiz has fallen short in recent times, but with Parillo on his side a revitalized “Huntington Beach Bad Boy” could very well return on Saturday night at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.

 “I have Tito fighting and that’s my main focus,” Parillo said. “I’ve been training with him every day. I’ll be working his corner for the fight and this is a fun situation for me, Tito’s an underdog and everybody in the room thinks Tito’s going to get his ass kicked and I like to believe that this guy’s got a good fight in him. He’s got more than what he’s been giving in his last few fights. He’s been going in there against really good competition too and it’s not like he’s been in there against slouches. Conditioning could play a factor in any fight, but Tito trains so hard he’ll be conditioned for this fight, he’s coming in with a better mindset.

“We’re going in to fight, to win and there’s a lot of different angles in this MMA game. I’ve never worked with Tito this close to a fight, I’ve never been in camp through the fight and went out and worked his corner. I’ve known him for years, but never really coached him and I think Tito has the ability to win this fight. We’re going in there to try and win.”

For additional information follow Joshua Carey on   Twitter.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC on Versus 4: Nate Marquardt and the Top 5 Fighters in Takedown Accuracy

Nate “The Great” Marquardt makes his debut in the welterweight division at UFC on Versus 4 event Sunday in Pittsburgh.But Marquardt’s success has been made in the middleweight division, where he ranks among the top five UFC fighters all-time in takedow…

Nate “The Great” Marquardt makes his debut in the welterweight division at UFC on Versus 4 event Sunday in Pittsburgh.

But Marquardt’s success has been made in the middleweight division, where he ranks among the top five UFC fighters all-time in takedown accuracy.

Making the list with Marquardt are two current champions and one fighter who also is scheduled to compete at UFC on Versus 4.

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Strikeforce: Fabricio Werdum’s Career and Training with Kings MMA

It has been five years since Fabricio Werdum (14-4-1 MMA, 3-0 Strikeforce) defeated Alistair Overeem (34-11 MMA, 2-0 Strikeforce).Overeem fell victim to Werdum’s world class submission skills in the second round and was defeated at PRIDE Total Eliminat…

It has been five years since Fabricio Werdum (14-4-1 MMA, 3-0 Strikeforce) defeated Alistair Overeem (34-11 MMA, 2-0 Strikeforce).

Overeem fell victim to Werdum’s world class submission skills in the second round and was defeated at PRIDE Total Elimination Absolute in 2006.

Since their fist meeting one fighter has went on to submit a legend and the other is the most hyped fighter not competing in the Ultimate Fighting Championship.

BleacherReport.com profiles Werdum’s work since his first fight with Overeem and the training home he’s found in California.

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